Slavutych (Славутич)

Commercial Brewery in Zaporizhzhia, Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Ukraine 🇺🇦
Owned by Carlsberg Ukraine

Established in 1974

Contact
Вулиця Василя Стуса, 6, Zaporizhzhia, 69123, Ukraine
Description
The starting point for the history of the Zaporizhzhia plant was the adoption of the Plan of Economic Development for the USSR Republics in the early 1970s. The document was set to solve the problem of the acute shortage of beer in the country. The Plan included the construction of about 22 beer brewing plants with the annual output capacity of 45—60 million liters of beer each. The construction of one of the first brewing plants according to a novel design by Czech engineers, started in 1971, with a record capacity for that time of 72 million liters of beer a year. Czech professionals were supervising the installation and checkout of equipment, as well as trained their Ukrainian colleagues to operate it. On December 12, 1974, the personnel of the Zaporizhzhia Beer Plant No. 2 made their first brew, and the first batch of beer was bottled on January 15, 1975. The new product was gaining popularity at a fast speed.

In 1976, the plant joined the Zaporizhzhia Industrial Association of Beer and Soft Drink Producers, which then was in operation until 1984. In 1986, the history of the plant saw the start of a campaign to fight alcohol addiction. Back in those years, sales quotas were introduced for the product, so this led to a significant drop in production output. For a while, beer had been in short supply. The years of Perestroika were also tough on the plant, with the economic crisis of the late 1980s worsening the matter. Ukraine was suffering from the collapse of the financial and payment systems, as well as from the disruption of economic links with the Soviet republics. However, despite all the challenges, the production was running virtually non-stop.

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5.4/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 5 Flavor 5 Texture 6 Overall 5.5
(Bottle 200 cl) Pretty, clear amber golden, but basically no head. Malty, lightly caramelish aroma. Lightly sweet malt with roasted notes and a rather short, dry bitterness. The alcohol is surprisingly well hidden for a lager. A lot better than feared. 121005
Tried from Bottle on 12 Oct 2005 at 15:13

5/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 5 Flavor 4 Texture 4 Overall 5
Greenish tinted yellow hazy beer; fluffy white head. Distinctly wheat, but also some grassy notes. In the end some faint lemony aroma. Very dry, near bitterish citruspeel taste, and a retronasal taste of alcohol, strange as it might sound. A sharp bitterish component surfaces with every sip to disappear again. Alcohol & burn also obvious in the MF; the rest is a rather light body, fairly fizzy. With the exception of the bitterish taste, this is somewhere in the middle of a Belgian wit and a German Hefew. A Belgian wit, without the spicing, or a German Weisse with raw wheat, stead of wheatmalt? Not very refined either way.
Tried on 19 Aug 2005 at 14:38

4/10 Appearance 8 Aroma 4 Flavor 3 Texture 2 Overall 4
Clear golden beer; thinnish white head. Bit fizzy nose, very grainy, rainwater and algae. Dry grainy taste with an unpleasant surrounding toasted flavour that is accompanied by a rather adstringent MF. Background corn flavour. Adstringent, dry and fizzy. Aftertaste becomes harsh bitter as walnut peel. This is supposed to be the n°1 Ukrainian beer. Seems the orange revolution stopped short somewhere.
Tried on 17 Aug 2005 at 14:22

4.9/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 5 Flavor 5 Texture 4 Overall 4.5
Bottled. Hazy golden, rich head. Sweet and yeasty, notes of orange. Soemwhat dusty. Bold, solid maltiness. Unrefined.
Tried from Bottle on 19 Dec 2004 at 05:31

3.3/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 3 Flavor 2 Texture 4 Overall 3
Bottled. Pale amber rich head. Fruity paper aroma. Sweet, medium bodied, some DMS, low bitterness.
Tried from Bottle on 19 Dec 2004 at 05:29

5.6/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 5 Flavor 5 Texture 6 Overall 6.5
Gold color that’s just a bit hazy with a fleeting white head. Some hops in the nose. Crisp clean flavor, but somewhat watery palate. Decent, but nothing great.
Tried on 29 Nov 2004 at 15:51

6.2/10 Appearance 6 Aroma 6 Flavor 6 Texture 6 Overall 7
Dark brown with some ruby around the edges with an average white head. Funny malt aroma (stale maybe?) The flavor is sweet malt, better than expected, but still off a bit. Some breadiness to this. Still better than some of the other offerings from the former USSR.
Tried on 29 Nov 2004 at 15:40

2.9/10 Appearance 4 Aroma 2 Flavor 3 Texture 4 Overall 2.5
yellow. very little aroma, some hops. Flavor of corn. smooth. not much there.
Tried on 21 Nov 2004 at 16:10

4.9/10 Appearance 4 Aroma 5 Flavor 6 Texture 8 Overall 2.5
Pours a thick yellow. Very oily and thick looking. Flavor is above average for a eastern european brew. If you looking to get drunk in any part of eastern europe this brew is for you. Not really bad tasting but not really good to write home about.
Tried on 27 Mar 2004 at 19:18

4.2/10 Appearance 4 Aroma 4 Flavor 4 Texture 6 Overall 4
Pale hazy straw... ugly color, but the head is huge and fluffy. BUT it disappears awfully quickly. A little grassy in the nose... I'm not sure about the taste. Bittersweet in a way... but a bit too sweet... almost has a light sweet chocolate, but that can't be it, not in this piss-light beer. It's kinda drinkable... I'm not gonna pour it out. But I won't have another.
Tried from Can on 02 Feb 2004 at 19:22